A good ground, a poor ground or no ground at all makes no difference in
the chance that lightning will or will not strike an object.
To determine the "cone of protection" that the tower will provide
make a ball with a 150 foot radius. Roll that ball on the ground up to
the tower until it touches the top of the tower. Everything under the
curve of the ball from the top of the tower to where the ball touches
the ground will be the cone of protection.
If the top of the house does not fall under that curved line then it
will not be protected.
73
Gary K4FMX
doc wrote:
> We are about to schedule the return of the concrete
> truck for the second phase of construction on our new
> steel house.
>
> Among other things they will pour the tower base and I
> need to finalize my decision as to location.
>
> As you may see in my crude ascii drawing below the grade
> slopes away from the house to the proposed main tower
> location approximately 20-25 feet from the corner of the
> house.
>
> Question: If the base of the tower is more thoroughly
> grounded than the house and is also located 4-6' lower,
> and the top of the mast is 40-45 feet taller than the
> house, will it
>
> a) provide any appreciable umbrella of lightning protection
> due to presenting a far more efficient path for resolution
> of potential?
>
> b) Does the relative height of the base matter at all in
> the assessment?
>
>
_______________________________________________
See: http://www.mscomputer.com for "Self Supporting Towers", "Wireless Weather
Stations", and lot's more. Call Toll Free, 1-800-333-9041 with any questions
and ask for Sherman, W2FLA.
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